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Editor
Not reading and signing letters you have dictated is dangerous
This article originally appeared in BMJ USA
EDITOR I know many consultants who virtually never sign their letters and,
worryingly, never read them after dictating them. To add insult to
injury, I recently saw a copy of a letter from a consultant to a
general practitioner, unsigned and from the mistakes obviously unread,
in which he had the cheek to encourage the general practitioner to send
patients for assessment at the private hospital where he worked.
Last year I returned from having spent one month in the United States;
there was an enormous amount of post awaiting my attention, much of it
medical. The final trigger to my writing this letter was that of this
large number of letters (mostly from fellow consultants but also from
general practitioners), over half were unsigned and had that dishonest
explanation in lieu of a signature. Several years ago I recall reading
a letter in a newspaper from a medical colleague expressing concern
about this matter, and he neatly and precisely gave his view The discourtesy is of course regrettable, but the dangerousness is of
far greater importance This matter must be aired, and to have any impact I am sure that it
requires a journal of the caliber of the BMJ for any useful impact to be made.
For some time I have been unhappy at the number of letters that
I receive unsigned, usually from fellow consultants but more recently
also from general practitioners. After the warm best wishes at the end
of the letter they usually state "Dictated but sent unsigned to avoid
delay"; as we both know, this is almost always totally untrue.
which I
share
that the practice is both discourteous and dangerous.
not least now, when the public image of doctors
is so severely battered. I can certainly confirm the dangerousness of
the practice but will give just two examples. One letter from a
consultant physician ended with the warm greeting "with very best
wishes, yours very sincerely," and referred to a patient and her
family requiring my assessment concerning her "antihypertensive
treatment" whereas in fact it should have said "antidepressive
treatment." Another consultant's letter referred to a patient
receiving chlorpromazine when in fact she was being treated with
clomipramine; had he read the letter he would have seen this error.
Woodley House, Nackington Road, Canterbury, Kent CT4 7AX, UK
PS. I have just received an unsigned letter from a consultant informing me that he is treating the patient with clonazepam in a dose of 500 mg daily; I imagine that this dose would be lethal.
No excuse for sending unedited letters
IN REPLY I work 95% in one hospital and do two sessions a month in another. In
the first hospital, every letter I dictate is typed and e-mailed to me.
I read them, edit them, and sometimes rewrite an entire sentence or
even a paragraph, and e-mail it back to the typist who will print it
and send it for my signature on the same day.
The situation is slightly different in the other hospital. The letters
are typed and e-mailed to me and I edit and e-mail them back. The
letters are then printed and signed by a proxy, in order to avoid
delay, which may be 2-4 weeks, if I were to sign it.
In this modern day of communications, there is no excuse for sending
unedited letters.
Sign a check, sign a letter!
IN REPLY Letters need not be signed
IN REPLY Moreover, more than 100 patients are seen in my clinics each week. If I
spent half a minute reading and signing each letter, that would be
about an hour a week I do not think GPs are being discourteous in sending such letters as
they are busy people too. Nor do I think I am being discourteous to the
GPs in sending them such letters, and I've never had any complaints on
the matter. Frequently I see typing errors such as patients complaining
of severe "lover back pain," but I have not encountered anything
dangerous occurring as a consequence within my own specialty.
Signing unread letters is more dangerous
IN REPLY But worse, and one of my pet hates, is the shower of letters and
similar documents coming toward me that have been signed, but clearly
not read. Surely this is more dangerous to the signer. Perhaps the
unsigned letter is a way of avoiding being held responsible for the
mistakes that doctors are not going to find and correct?
Return the letters marked "opened but not read"
IN REPLY I can't read and sign 200 x-ray reports a day
IN REPLY Use secure web-based systems
IN REPLY For several years it has been mandatory to sign your reports at most
hospitals. In my case, being a consultant doctor at different physical
locations, it meant earlier that it could take several weeks before I
was back in the same hospital and able to sign, which is too long in
most cases.
I have solved the problem by using a web-based system, which allows me
to do all the signing on the Internet. My secretary gets my voice file
through the Internet and then types it. I can then read and sign it,
and then send the referral back to the referring doctor I assume there are some different systems, but the one I have come
across, which works well, is made by MDinTouch International Inc
(www.mdintouch.com).
Not signing letters keeps my stress levels in check
IN REPLY Five years ago, when I started adding "Please accept unsigned to
avoid delay" to my letters, there was some economy of the truth, as
Shere would have suspected. However, "Please accept unsigned to avoid
delay and because the prospect of unnecessarily signing 2000 or 3000 letters a year fills me with nausea and will bring on my early
departure from the NHS" would not have struck the right tone.
A secretarial misconception
EDITOR
I completely agree with Shere. If you send
unread letters, you are doing it at your own peril.
Cleveland, Queensland, Australia
sri_varman{at}health.qld.gov.au
To fail to check a letter sent out in your
name is the act of a fool. The reason for checking a letter is to
ensure that there are neither errors nor inaccuracies in the
communication or the clinical information. It is the clinician's duty
to ensure the completeness, accuracy, and veracity of the provided
information. If the receiving clinician uses the information that has
been provided and this information is inaccurate, then this clearly places the patient at significant risk, as outlined in Shere's letter.
The excuses for not signing a letter, which Shere highlights, demonstrate poor professional attitudes and a dangerous risk-taking exercise. It would be more than embarrassing to declare that a document
was inaccurate and unsigned if one's legal defense depended on that
document. The theme raised by Shere also applies to internal communications and the completion of request forms. If a monetary check
is invalid until it is proof-read, signed, and dated, then a clinical
letter or communication should be viewed similarly. Sign a check, sign
a letter!
Whiston Hospital, Prescot, Merseyside L35 5DR, UK
jeff.mcilwain{at}gwise.sthkh-tr.nwest.nhs.uk
I gave up signing my clinic letters seven
years ago and began ending them with "dictated but not signed by
. . . ." I therefore disagree with Shere. I
did so because I visit peripheral clinics every other week. Initially
my letters were typed by secretaries at these clinics and sent back to
my base hospital for signing. However, it was usually more than a week
after the clinic before the letters went into the post, and I felt this
delay was unacceptable. I am fortunate to have excellent secretaries
whom I can entrust with the task of typing, and I have full confidence
in them.
time which, in my opinion, could be better spent.
I encourage my trainees to dictate but not sign as well.
Ysbyty Gwynedd, Bangor, UK mel.jones{at}btinternet.com
I agree with Shere. If the letter is sent
without the author reading it, then say so but cut out the mushy drivel of the excuse.
Exeter, UK midgley{at}mednetics.org
Shere is right to highlight the danger of
letters that are "dictated but not signed." However, the impact of
airing the issue in the BMJ may be less than he hopes. I
made precisely the same point in the BMJ 10 years
ago,1 but the practice has continued unabated. An
interesting suggestion was that offending letters should be returned
marked "opened but not read."2
International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, Austria
j.doherty{at}iaea.org
1.
Doherty J.
Followed to the letter.
BMJ
1991;
303:
722
2.
Williamson EPM.
Followed to the letter.
BMJ
1991;
303:
858.
As a radiologist, much of my dictated output
is not in the form of letters, but as radiological reports, sometimes as many as 200 a day. Checking and personally signing all of these is,
of course, impractical. One has to trust the secretarial staff to
transcribe one's dictation accurately, and the clinicians to make
contact if the sense of the report has become garbled beyond recognition. Nevertheless I am sure that mistakes occur from time to time.
Rotherham District General Hospital, UK
tom{at}powell1935.freeserve.co.uk
In Sweden the issue of signing your report
has recently attracted some attention in a case where a cancer result was missed and the treatment delayed when the doctor was on vacation and had not signed his report.
all through a
web interface.
Helsingborg, Rehabklinik, Sweden
pal.lindstrom{at}priomed.com
Yes, a signed letter is more courteous than
an unsigned one. But I hope that the GPs in my area realize that an
unsigned letter was dictated with just as much courtesy, that my stress levels are kept in check, and that it will arrive more quickly. I would
postulate that what GPs really do not like are long, rambling, and
unstructured letters in which it is difficult to pick out essential
information like diagnosis, treatment, and the date of the next appointment.
Peterborough District Hospital PE3 6DA, UK
timothy.rimmer{at}talk21.com
IN REPLY
I take care to sign my letters before they
are sent out. I dictated a detailed letter on a patient whom I saw in a
recent Child Development Clinic, including information on birth
history. On my receipt of the letter for signing, I was surprised to
learn that the patient had been born by "normal virginal delivery."
Wasn't the last one of those about 2001 years ago?
Ealing Hospital, Southall, Middlesex UB1 3HW, UK
don.urquhart{at}usa.net
© BMJ 2002
What can you learn from this BMJ paper? Read Leanne Tite's Paper+